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42 Syracuse L. Rev. 75 (1991)
A Semiotics of Legal Argument

handle is hein.journals/syrlr42 and id is 87 raw text is: A SEMIOTICS OF LEGAL ARGUMENTt

Duncan Kennedyt
I. INTRODUCTION
My impression is that when people interested in legality appro-
priate the theory or philosophy of language, they tend to focus on the
rule form and the facts in the world to which the rules are applied.
For example, what does language theory tell us about the meaning of
a statement such as you must be 35 years old to be eligible for elec-
tion to the Presidency? In this paper, I pursue a different kind of
borrowing, focussing on what language theory might offer the as yet
rudimentary theory of legal argument.
By legal argument, I mean argument in favor of or against a par-
ticular resolution of a gap, conflict, or ambiguity in the system of legal
rules. In this form of argument, it is the practice to deploy stereo-
typed argument-bites, such as, my rule is good because it is highly
administrable. Argument-bites come in opposed pairs, so that the
above phrase is likely to be met with, but your rule's administrability
comes from such rigidity that it will do serious injustice in many par-
ticular cases.
Starting with the argument-bite as a basic unit, I propose a set of
inquiries into legal argument, using language theory as a source of
analogies. First, there is the lexicographical or mapping enterprise
of trying to identify the most common bites. Second, there is an in-
quiry into the generation of pairs and their clustering into dialectical
sequences, rituals of parry and thrust. The response above might be
answered, there will be few serious injustices in particular cases be-
cause my rule is knowable in advance (unlike your vague standard)
and parties will adjust their conduct accordingly. Third, there is the
second-order mapping task of identifying the major clusters (some
candidates: formalities as a precondition for legally effective expres-
t Copyright © 1989 by Duncan Kennedy. An earlier version of the main article
appeared in R. KEVELSON, 3 LAW AND SEMIoTIcS (1989). The Appendix is original to
this issue.
t Professor of Law, Harvard Law School.

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